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Emergency Physician Finds Career Calling In Coaching, Motivating

By Aisha Terry, MD, FACEP | on May 9, 2024 | 0 Comment
From the College Leadership
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Physician leadership is a priority for ACEP President Aisha Terry, MD, MPH, FACEP. She’s approaching the issue from all sides. As she builds a programmatic approach within ACEP to identify and cultivate leaders, she is strengthening the “pipeline” and creating opportunities for newer physicians to thrive.

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Explore This Issue
ACEP Now: Vol 43 – No 05 – May 2024

The Leadership Spotlight highlights examples of emergency physicians using their foundation in emergency medicine to lead, teach, and inspire the next generation. Whether inside the hospital or beyond, the foundation laid by deep experience in the specialty is versatile, unique, and invaluable.

Dr. Terry: How has emergency medicine prepared you for coaching and leading?

Dr. Barth: As the new executive director of the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) medical honor society, I lean on my background in emergency medicine to teach and mentor the next generation of physician leaders. As emergency physicians, we can do a lot and we do it well.

I’m a coach at heart and I am grateful for the opportunity to help physicians achieve their goals through the AOA leadership fellowship—a one-year program where physicians learn to hone their skills to lead from within and expand their servant leadership. The program focuses on mid-career physicians and current chairs who want to help solve the biggest challenges facing emergency medicine and the health care system.

Our students are doing so much more than lab work. They are working in the community and making a difference.

Coaching can be a vital resource for students and a constructive outlet for teachers. My research shows that coaching helps faculty, too. It’s not just students that benefit. Coaching helps teachers stay inspired and motivated.

BRADLEY E. BARTH, MD, FACEP

  • CURRENT POSITION: practicing emergency physician, University of Kansas School of Medicine; Executive Director of the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society
  • MEDICAL SCHOOL: University of Kansas School of Medicine
  • INTERNSHIP: Internal Medicine, Naval Medical Center of San Diego
  • RESIDENCY: Emergency Medicine, University of California San Francisco Fresno
  • ADDITIONAL NOTES: Decorated Navy flight surgeon; sideline emergency management physician for the Kansas City Chiefs NFL team

Dr. Terry: How can coaching impact care delivery and professional development?

Dr. Barth: I’m incredibly fortunate to have a platform that could be an opportunity to change the make-up of medicine. We need doctors who share their patients’ lived experience. The better we understand their challenges, the easier it will be to fix them.

Pages: 1 2 | Single Page

Topics: careerDr. Bradley E. BarthLeadership Spotlightmentoringphysician coachingProfiles

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